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Mail-in ballots exceed early voting ballots cast in special El Paso City Council election

A voter encouragement sign at the El Paso County elections office.
KVIA
A voter encouragement sign at the El Paso County elections office.

EL PASO, Texas -- Mail-in ballots for a special election to fill two seats on El Paso City Council are exceeding the number of early voting ballots cast by 64%.

That's something the El Paso County elections administrator admits she has never seen before. Lisa Wise also believes those mail-in ballots could decide the outcome of the Dec. 14 special election.

Even though the majority of the ballots cast in this election are mailed in, ABC-7 spoke to an early voter who prefers casting her ballot the old fashioned way.

Dora Hernandez just cast her ballot in an election which has only two items, the District 3 and 6 city council seats.

Wise believes more people are voting by mail-in rather than how Hernandez chose to vote, because this is an off-calendar election in December, when most are focusing on the holidays.

Of 980 votes cast so far, 629 were mail-in ballots.

"I prefer to go into the place to vote. To me its easier. Just drive by, I was here, so I voted here," said Hernandez of early voting at a polling location.

Wise said the majority of voters who ask for mail-in ballots are people over the age of 65.

ABC-7 asked Wise if mail-in ballots could open the door to fraud by someone, like a caretaker, forging the voter's signature.

"When those are returned, they're reviewed by two different boards, a signature verification and a ballot board opening. So there's a lot of steps that go through our ballot-by-mail process. It's not just going in, getting a flier, filling something out and sending it in," responded Wise.

She said the signature on the ballot is matched with the signiture first used when signing up for mail-in ballots.

Wise adds that elections workers check every other year to see if voters are either deceased, felons or want to be suspended from the mail-in ballot list.

Wise noted that if current trends continue, mail-in ballots could determine the outcome of the Dec. 14 election.

"I believe in an election that has such low turnout as this, yes it could be decided by a dozen votes, 20 votes, 30 votes," explained Wise.

Wise anticipates this election could cost city taxpayers as much as $200,000.

Early voting ends Dec. 10.

Article Topic Follows: Politics

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